Red Squad did have a respect for Captain Sisko, so they probably would have handed the ship over regardless of orders.
Too bad the Valiant's crew was all so insufferable. Even the sympathetic character of Collins was brutal.
this is what I can't stand about the episode.
re-watched it a few days ago. I like it
wish they hadn't screwed up Nog's rank insignia
what gets me is the torpedo results in a super huge fireball yet ends up doing no real damage. I'd have made it a smaller fireball or made it do at least some damage.
I know, the point of the episode was to show them to be young and over confident.
and I disagree with Jake, I could totally see Sisko taking the defiant on that same mission
I think in real military organizations, a real commission outranks a temporary commission.
Nog should have been in command as soon as he found out the situation. If it had been Worf coming aboard, he wouldn't have meekly accepted the orders of a cadet with a battlefield commission as captain.
It strains credibility that even the most gung ho cadets would continue the mission for months and months without any communication with Starfleet Command.
^ Most engineering officers can be qualified in command as well (Scotty and Geordi, for example). So no, being an engineer would not disqualify someone from a command role.
Too bad the Valiant's crew was all so insufferable. Even the sympathetic character of Collins was brutal.
this is what I can't stand about the episode.
This is exactly why I have a love/hate relationship with the episode. All their nasty little attitudes just make me laugh and remind me of the year I spent in a military school where high school kids with fake rank gave orders with their noses up in the air like their shit didn't stink.
The episode demonstrates perfectly why its not a good idea to give real authority or life/death decision-making responsibility to anyone under about 27 years old. 99% of people under 27 (and probably about 75% over, sad to say) just aren't mature enough to handle the burden of command.
The episode demonstrates perfectly why its not a good idea to give real authority or life/death decision-making responsibility to anyone under about 27 years old. 99% of people under 27 (and probably about 75% over, sad to say) just aren't mature enough to handle the burden of command.
Not really we've had starship captains older than 27 who just as big toolish glory hounds. In fact they outnumber Watters by virtue there being more of them.
The episode demonstrates perfectly why its not a good idea to give real authority or life/death decision-making responsibility to anyone under about 27 years old. 99% of people under 27 (and probably about 75% over, sad to say) just aren't mature enough to handle the burden of command.
Not really we've had starship captains older than 27 who just as big toolish glory hounds. In fact they outnumber Watters by virtue there being more of them.
Reread what I wrote (and you quoted) about the 75% of people older than 27 not being mature enough to handle the rigors of command. You actually agree with me.
Not really we've had starship captains older than 27 who just as big toolish glory hounds. In fact they outnumber Watters by virtue there being more of them.
Reread what I wrote (and you quoted) about the 75% of people older than 27 not being mature enough to handle the rigors of command. You actually agree with me.
Who says it's an issue of maturity, and not cases of ego, greed, and too much ambition. Or just plain insanity.
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